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La Nina's Here Through March, Just Don't Tell Chilly Houston

La Nina to Last Through Winter, Just Don't Tell Chilly Houston

(Bloomberg) -- La Nina is likely to persist through the winter, though you wouldn’t know it if you lived in Houston.

The weather phenomenon that has historically delivered warmer winters across the southern U.S. is being challenged by another force known as the Madden Julian Oscillation, a pulse of clouds and rain that moves through tropical oceans. The oscillation is pushing cold air into the south, where temperatures in places like Houston are well below average.

La Nina can shift weather patterns globally, moving the price of commodities such as coal, soybeans and natural gas. Strong La Ninas have brought flooding rains to Australian coal mining regions, droughts to Brazil’s soybean growing areas and, when the Madden-Julian Oscillation isn’t putting its thumb on the scales, warmer, drier conditions across the U.S. South. 

La Nina's Here Through March, Just Don't Tell Chilly Houston

The oscillation has been in just the right places this winter to “help push cold into the U.S.,’’ said Michelle L’Heureux, a forecaster with the U.S. Climate Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland. “It’s really been a slow mover through these phases as of late, so this has definitely lasted longer than I thought. Hopefully we will see a big warm up coming up here, but it’s certainly taken its time.’’

Early December brought record snowfalls and frigid temperatures across the U.S. South, probably the result of the pattern. The low in Houston Saturday is expected to fall to 31 degrees Fahrenheit (minus -0.6 Celsius), 12 below average.

The odds of La Nina, characterized by unusually cold ocean temperatures in the Pacific, lasting through March, are 85 percent, the U.S. Climate Prediction Center said Thursday, little changed from 82 percent a month ago. The phenomenon has contributed to volatile weather, which has helped keep gas in a narrow trading range around $3 per million British thermal units. This year’s La Nina is expected to weaken into the spring.

Gas futures surged to a one-month high in New York on Jan. 2 as temperatures touched record lows in parts of the country. Prices then retreated as traders anticipated a mid-January warmup.

--With assistance from Naureen S. Malik

To contact the reporters on this story: Jim Efstathiou Jr. in New York at jefstathiou@bloomberg.net, Brian K. Sullivan in Boston at bsullivan10@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Doan at ldoan6@bloomberg.net, Stephen Cunningham, Will Wade

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